Mobile Phone as Home Computer? 187
theodp writes "Citing millions of Japanese consumers as proof it can work, MIT's Philip Greenspun hasissued a call for comments on his hypothesis that the mobile phone can function as a home computer for a substantial number of consumers if it's paired up with an appliance that drives the phone from a full-size keyboard and display."
General computers (Score:5, Interesting)
HipTop (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:HipTop (Score:3, Interesting)
The hiptop is the Hotel California of mobile devices.
Re:HipTop (Score:5, Interesting)
To clarify why my comment above is relevant to Greenspun's article, if this type of model (lock-in) carries over into a device that does all your computing needs, that would be scary for consumers.
Right now desktop systems are pretty open. You can write your own programs for them, for example. Phones are much less open. OK, all that is obvious.
What's not well known outside the hiptop user community is just how closed some systems can be.
My understanding of the Danger hiptop is this: To put programs you write yourself on a Danger hiptop, you must become a registered developer, and even then you can not share your programs with other users unless they are also registered developers, or unless Danger gives its official stamp of approval that your application will be THE representative application for its category (calculator, etc.) in their commercial catalog. If they have a choice of approving a free calculator program, versus a less nice commercial calculator that their carrier customers will make money from, which one do you think they approve of? That's right, the commercial one.
Imagine if this model became the model for desktop computing. Everything goes through an approval process, where approval is based on the business interests of some gatekeepers. Not very good for consumers. So while the form factor may be capable as Greenspun suggests, let's hope the business models to not follow.
HipTop development (Score:5, Informative)
1. Many high profile sites and publications (like Popular Science [popsci.com]) gave step-by-step instructions on unlocking your hiptop/Sidekick and where to get third-party apps.
2. An application called Hiptones allowed you to add your own ringtones and circumvent T-Mobile's catalog cash cow. T-Mobile is (or was) the only provider to intentionally disable loading external ringtones via email, so the only other way to get them was to purchase them. The author of Hiptones began selling it, and this made Danger and T-Mobile very unhappy. The author and Danger quickly reached an "agreement" where Hiptones would no longer be sold or available at all, and shortly thereafter, Danger was no longer freely giving out developer keys.
I'm really tempted to blame T-Mobile and the other carriers here. From my experiences with the Danger crew, it seems like they'd really like the hiptop to be as open as possible, but the carriers are insisting that they lock it down to pad their precious pockets.
Re:HipTop (Score:2)
I'd like to add that when I bought software for my old Nokia 3650 which uses the Symbian Series 60 OS, I was very often asked to register over the air with my phones ID. This not only gave me platform lock-in, but individual phone lock-in as well. The only way to get most of that software onto a new Series 60 phone, or even a replacement if my phone broke, would be to re-buy the software.
Remember when everyone went ape-shit a few years back when Intel introduced processor IDS? You know how e
Re:HipTop (Score:2, Informative)
1) if the device breaks, you lose your data. I have broken 2 Sidekicks in 3 years, not surprising because I keep it in my pocket/briefcase/auto seat/wherever, without a case, it is in motion 16 hours a day. The paint is worn off of the edges of my current device. When I receive each new device, I simply move the SIM card and within minutes all of my notes/contacts/numbers ar
Re:It's a proof of concept. (Score:2)
When I lived in Los Angeles, it was extremely flaky.
Here in Pittsburgh, surprisingly, it actually works better. Strange. But there are still places where Verizon service is far superior.
Another problem is the lack of support for JavaScript, I suppose, but the only mobile phone I know that has it is the Blackberry, and its support is so slow it had might as well not exist.
D
Re:HipTop (Score:3, Funny)
However, I'd be afraid to run Gentoo on a phone. Not only would GCC take all the space; it would take weeks to compile Openoffice, not just hours.
Re:HipTop (Score:2)
All in all mobiles phones are small, (relatively) slow, vendor specific computers. I'd prefer to wait until laptops become smaller and more conveniant (or PDA's become a little more powerful) than wait for mobile phones to become usable as everyday personal computers
Just my 2 cents.
Re:HipTop (Score:4, Informative)
None of which apparently affect Japan, where mobile phones are the primary method of accessing the internet and personal data.
It's really difficult to understate how much more advanced the Japanese mobile phone industry is than that of any other country (and especially the United States). The problem for the rest of the world that's trying to catch up is that the mobile phone culture has grown in Japan around the idea of the phone as a central hub, whereas it's the opposite in other countries. Learning to use a mobile phone as hub for those of us in the US is like learning a second language. It's not intuitive for us like it is for them.
But if you want to look at some of the solutions they've come up with for the problems you've listed, they're easily apparent for all to see. The input issue is something that's both better and worse in Japan... typing on a computer keyboard is hardly all that fast to begin with there (you need to type the hiragana, then select kanji combinations from long lists for every word), so mobile phones are not really much different. Screen sizes there are simply bigger than they are here, as is screen quality. 3.2" QVGA screens are pretty much standard. Phones sell based on speed and interface so that's not an issue either (phones with poor interfaces - such as those from Motorola and Nokia - simply don't sell). And external storage is handled in the same way it's handled here - offsite or on a separate PC.
People do use computers in Japan. But for most people, mobile phones handle 90% of everything they could want to do with a PC. Email, web browsing (via high-speed networks), game playing, etc. There are a huge number of mobile-oriented web sites in Japan - in fact, you really can't design a site in Japan without having a mobile version these days that duplicates all of the functions and most of the look and feel of the real thing. And I'm not just talking single HTML pages, I'm talking about sites that offer real web services via mobile. So there's no dearth of content. Many phones also have TV tuners, almost all phones have java, and most phones have 3D graphics capabilities.
One other thing, which I think is both interesting and important: their cell phones often do more than most "smart" phones in the US, yet they both cost less than US market cell phones and they are not PDA-based. Their smart-phones grew from the cell phone form factor, whereas ours have grown from the PDA. So we pay more and our phones are less stylish - and style is a huge deal in Japan. (I also think it's a bigger deal here than manufacturers seem to think, and it's one reason why smart-phones here don't sell as well as they could. Put smart-phone type capabilities in a RAZR-like package with a QVGA screen and a 3 megapixel camera and sell it for $300-$400 and you'll sell a crazy number of units. That's what the Japanese industry does.)
It's still debateable whether it works better to have one big laptop that does 100% of what you want, or whether it's better to have a PC at home to act as a storage and sync device and then to have a bunch of smaller devices (phone, iPod, Game Boy or PSP) to do everything else. In Japan, it's kind of important to have a very small device that you can use on the train to do things like check email and browse the web. You really can't use a laptop, nor do most people want to lug one around. And as an extension of that, over time the carriers and phone manufacturers have added other entertainment-related functions to help people get through those down times.
I don't know that the culture is ever going to change here, and I don't know that it should either. There are fewer things people really need to use cell phones for here - the train situation, where you've got about one square foot of standing space
Re:HipTop (Score:2)
They are trying to solve this little issue. One solution is the T9 Predictive Text [t9.com] mode you'll find on some phones. Personally I hate T9 though, because without extensive editing of the dictionary you usually wind up 'spelling' words you didn't want.
I just bought a Samsung SGH-P207 though, and
Now where did I put the computer? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Striptease (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Striptease (Score:2)
Worst case, they could go with a wireless Revolution-style controller for pointing.
Re:Striptease (Score:2)
What fun we'll all have...
Re:Striptease (Score:2, Insightful)
Good luck programming or using regular expressions then.
Re:Striptease (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Striptease (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Striptease (Score:2)
True, but then One would also be prone to say OMFG CAMPING WHORE1!1!!11 and such.
Re:Striptease (Score:2)
Re:Striptease (Score:3, Informative)
Take a look at Dasher [cam.ac.uk]
the words just sort of flow in from the right of the screen and you pick the letter that you want... it makes guesses at what word you want next, and those letters appear bigger making it easier to catch them...
it sounds strange but it's really amazingly easy to use.
Done. (Score:4, Interesting)
For the past year, 99% of my data needs have been met with my HP iPAQ h6315 PDA Phone.
All my
My news, weather, e-mail, VNC, ftp, Excel and Word apps are perfect -- no bloat.
My home TV-PC-PVR gets its e-program guide via Bluetooth to my phone to the net. No DSL needed.
When I'm at a customer's office, my WiFi kicks in, automatically.
I write articles, use the built in camera (VGA res only) every day, and even use GPS with it.
No more laptop, desktop or server anywhere. My home TV-PC is nothing but a Tivo made my way. No Internet or office apps.
FWIW, I type with my cokehead-style thumbnail on screen faster than 90% of people with normal keyboards.
Re:Done. (Score:5, Funny)
I am the one in the car behind you. The train has gone & the gates have opened. You are
blocking traffic. I can't honk any louder.
Re:Done. (Score:3, Informative)
User interfaces to these things have *got* to improve. The people that use these things are in their late teens, and early to mid 20s. Once that thing called 'age' kicks in those tiny ass screens are a huge pai
Re:Done. (Score:2)
And I guess my touchtyping speed probably isn't in the top 10%.
Re:Done. (Score:3)
Hmm, you seem to have reading difficulties. The pages says that 90% would put you around 65 wpm.
Re:Done. (Score:2)
pocket
keyboard
completion
comfortable
Also, after using the auto-completed word, it automatically adds a space.
Ok, maybe not 90% but I know from experience that I'm hella fast on the OSK. I've been typing for nearly 28 years, so habit is habit.
No (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not really. (Score:2)
And why shouldn't we use a computer and a phone, and just connect the two? Viruses (and phones are
Re:No (Score:3, Insightful)
Your second point stems from amateur design o
Re:No (Score:2)
If only it were open and broadband.
Re:No (Score:2)
Small mainframe or big calculator? (Score:5, Insightful)
The PC is a scaled-down circa 1965 mainframe.
Actually, it's been argued that the microcomputer/personal-computer is actually a scaled up circa 1971 calculator; the first microprocessors were designed for calculator use, and the first microcomputers were exploitations of these by hackers who wanted their own computers. They weren't designed by someone trying to scale down a mainframe, they evolved from someone trying to build a computer from a crude microprocessor.
But that's perhaps disingenuous; I think what he is referring to is the OS; and it has to be said that as they grew in power, personal computers took their cue more and more from powerful mainframe/minicomputer operating systems like Unix.
Re:Small mainframe or big calculator? (Score:3)
so it's not that far from reality to think that you would someday carry around your personal computers cpu/mem etc in your phone and then use keyboards and bigger screens with it while doing work that requires such, or maybe have a built in projector and some projised keyboards.
Am I the only person... (Score:5, Insightful)
Why turn our phones into games consoles, video cameras, mp3 players, computers and whatever else we can fit into it, if it doesn't do anything well? We've got digital cameras that can play mp3s badly, mp3 players that can take photos badly, phones that play mp3s and take photos badly. Most people I know who want to listen to mp3s will use an ipod or zen, since the quality is higher and they have more storage, and most people I know who actually take many photos carry round a digital camera. Most people I know who have a camera phone have used the camera only once or twice.
On my ideal phone it would have a phone book, ability to phone people, and the ability to function as a modem for my laptop. Just a plain old black and white screen would be fine though. Maybe there should be an ability to keep a small diary/timetable on it, since we carry it round and it could function as an alerting device.
No. (Score:2)
I see these things and think; Gee, I can drop this out of my backpack some day and instandly destroy my phone, my mp3 player, my camera... in other words Single Point Of Failure.
It's crap, oh so much crap.
No sir (or madam), you are Not Alone.
Re:No. (Score:3, Interesting)
If that worries you then buy two identical phones; they're cheap. That way you have an automatic backup for your phone, your mp3 player, your camera, etc. Sure, you'd have to carry two devices around, but that's still fewer devices than you would have to carry if you had a separate device for each function.
As far as data loss goes, I agree with previous poster
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:2)
Eventually the technology will get there. It's crappy now but these are just the first baby steps.
I know I sure as hell don't want to carry around umpteen different little devices that each can get lost, together take up a lot of space, and each have their own interface to learn when I could just have one small dev
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:2)
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:2)
There's this little thing called network storage...
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:2)
There are many problems with cramming features in one device:
1- miniaturization is costly
2- more electronics use more power
3- seamlessly integrating a disparate feature sets is difficult
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:2)
You're talking about two different things. Professional photography is going to require special equipment no matter what. For personal photos even nice cameras do not have fancy lenses.
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:2)
Besides that there are quite a lot of interesting research on this. Eg Philips are working on a system of fluid optics which are very very small and ideal to incorporate into a mobile phone.
Finally while a mobile phone camera will never rival a high-end dSLR it doesn't have to. It has to be a good enough camera. And the biggest benefit of having a phone with a camera is that the ca
START with the camera then (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:3)
Now, as far as mp3 capabilities, I think that any mp3 device that can't hold the bulk of your "active" collection (for me approximately 100 cd's worth of music) isn't worth having. In fact, my ultimate dream is to have a cell phone that has unlimited high-speed net ac
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:2)
For me, if i need to carry devices to do some task, carrying the less possible ones, because they have all those tasks integrated, could be better, specially if do all those tasks well. Integrating in a device that combines a cell phone, a pim, a photo camera, a somewhat flexible internet access, games, ebook reading, mobile storage for data, a calculator, etc, and doing all of them as
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:4, Insightful)
And already we have feature creep, and there's your whole problem. You're saying, "Why do we have phones with all these features? Why don't we have them with only the features I want?! " Your desire for laptop/internet connectivity is another man's camera. Of course we all want the features "I want", and don't really care about anything else.
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:2)
Ok, it has a camera too, which I don't really care about. The thing is, its OS is complicated enough that it will sometimes just freeze and I have to remove the battery to regain control.
This may be progress, but it's certainly of the two-steps-forward-one-step-back variety.
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:2)
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:2, Interesting)
The only thing it doesn't have is a crappy camera, but wake me up when 3 megapixel high-quality cameras start being put into these d
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:2)
For the simple reason that something is better than nothing.
Game consoles: My phone goes with me everywhere. My DS doesn't. I ain't playing Mario 64 on my phone, but the pool game on my phone is good enough to eat up about 10 minutes while waiting for a movie to start or something.
Video cameras: I don't carry around my Mini-DV camera like anywhere. My pho
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:2)
I use my camera phone to take quick "notes" and transport information on the go. I have a directory of "store hours" signs from some of my favourite takeaway restaurants, so I can look up if they're open when I ha
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:2)
Am I the only person who thinks that Phillip Greenspun is just another dot-bomb self-promoter desperate for the easy press coverage of the old days who can be safely ignored?
Am I the only person who's had enough of con artists and marketroids declaring, decade after decade, that the PC is dead and what consumers really want is vendor lock-in and endless subscription fees?
Re:Am I the only person... (Score:2, Insightful)
"The supreme goal of all theory is to make the irreducible basic elements as simple and as few as possible without having to surrender the adequate representation of a single datum of experience."
-- Albert Einstein
Also, "Make each program do one thing well" should apply to electronics too.
However, making all technology work together is difficult when you have
This could happen (Score:2)
We like to super size (Score:3, Insightful)
I have heard that it's actually faster to type japanese words on a cell than english words on a keyboard. Can someone confirm or refute this?
American innovation focuses on making things easier. It's a step backward to have to type on a tiny number keyboard. If there were a better way to input data into the cellphone (touchscreen/voice?), and to read it without squinting or scrolling, then it would sell. It's a whole lot easier to call someone than to text them.
Re:We like to super size (Score:2)
Re:We like to super size (Score:5, Informative)
Not true. Typing is always faster on a keyboard. Anyway, typing Japanese on a cell phone is WAY faster than typing English (or other roman-alphabet language).
I'm Spanish, living in Japan, and I have a Spanish friend who's living here too. When we send email to each other from our phones we mostly use Japanese instead of Spanish (even though Spanish is our mother tongue) because it's so fast to type.
The reason is that when you type Japanese on a phone's keypad you type syllabes (or phonemes) instead of individual letters. And most words are composed by 2-3 phonemes, so typing a full sentence in Japanese often takes as few keystrokes as a single word in English.
However, when typing Japanese on a keyboard you actually type the letters that compose each individual phoneme. Or at least on the standard input method that most people use. In Windows and many X-Windows input methods it is possible to switch to a mode where each key is assigned a phoneme instead of a single letter. In theory you should be able to type VERY fast in that mode, but in practice you have to learn another keyboard layout [ag0ny.com], so nobody cares.
Re:We like to super size (Score:2)
Re:We like to super size (Score:2)
The article doesn't really get it though, all you really need is a high resolution screen(hdtv ain't it...), a keyboard and maybe a mouse. Either get storage from an additional box(perhaps your tivo/pvr/whatever) or the network. Or, in 5 years, 10 Gigabytes of flash won't be a big deal, th
Yeah, great idea (Score:3)
Make a Separate Category for Prophets (Score:2, Interesting)
For a summary of all the stories that would qualify for that section read here [mwscomp.com]
Ah yes, Philip Greenspun... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:read carefully (Score:2)
difference between a computer and an appliance (Score:3, Insightful)
Not quite a dupe... (Score:2)
SSDD
-Charles
Re:Not quite a dupe... (Score:2)
I just assumed this was a dupe
A laptop is still a laptop (Score:4, Insightful)
Is this really about phones? (Score:5, Informative)
Perhaps I'm just being thick, but this seems like another variation on the "make the PC an appliance" theme. The idea certainly has some appeal, but past efforts toward this sort of goal (e.g., the MailStation, WebTV) have had only modest success, if that.
One other thing: I am slightly skeptical of the use of Japan as a demonstration that a Cell phone can catch on as a general-purpose computing device. The Japanese writing system is complicated: two different sets of ideograms plus a set of phonetic symbols. I think this may mean that the difference in input speed between a regular keyboard and the phone keypad is considerably less in Japanese than in a language that uses the [Western] alphabet. (If you have ever seen a Japanese word processor, I think you'll understand what I'm getting at.)
Japanese Input (Score:3, Informative)
You're close but a little bit off. Japanese has two syllabaries, and they represent the same sound combinations. This is a bit like our alphabet having two versions of each letter - uppercase and lowercase. Japan
Re:Japanese Input (Score:2)
Zero administration PC (Score:2)
All were failures.
The key line in his article is this: Because nearly every Appliance will generate a $200-600 per year DSL or cable modem revenue stream for the carrier ...
This sounds like a fant
This would work (Score:3, Insightful)
My desktop system is more of a blob of data that I latch on to with different terminals over the network. Sometimes I use the PC itself, sometimes I use this laptop, sometimes I use a computer at my parents' house. I've visted people and used a live CD.
It doesn't really matter how big my PC is, if I run it this way. In fact, the smaller the better.
It would be cool to carry an object that had everything in it (like a phone) instead of connecting to my desktop over the network. I think that would be an improvement.
paired up with an appliance??? (Score:2)
Yea, right. Isn't that "appliance" basically the computer then, and the cel phone the Internet access or digital modem? I guess if you want to really cripple yourself you can limit the processing power of the appliance to the point that it's useless without the cel phone, but is there any point in doing so?
We don't need any (more) of this "dumbing down"... (Score:2)
hardly ever is good idea: Networked computers don't become less dangerous just because they end up in the hands of those who don't know what they are doing. Giving the users powerful bloatware with an oversimplified interface that obscures the complexity is not necessarily benign either.
Even with today's PCs, "grandma at 65" as well as her ten-
Why phones work in Japan (Score:5, Insightful)
1) Most people aren't at home most of the time (this is the worst generalization, but it works). So most people are not sat in front of their computer, most of the time.
2) Most people have long commutes.
3) Most people don't commute by car, so have time to play with the phone.
4) PDAs don't do well in Japan. Most phones have PDA-like features, which means there is no need for PDAs but actually this is wrong because most phones don't synch with computers in any meaningful manner (and I'm looking at you, Sharp. In fact, while I'm looking at you, Sharp, I'd like to ask how it's possible for you to engineer such ill-conceived user interfaces into your phones time after time after time. Maybe you need to think on this when Vodafone finally gets a clue and asks Toshiba to lead with new-generation phones. Not that Vodafone will be around in Japan much longer unless it stops the ex-pat/in-pat/Japanese in-fighting and gets to grips with the way its phone providers make better phones for the competition than for Vodafone. Hello NEC).
5) Cellphone charges are pretty low, in the great scheme of things, so people can use them as recreational devices.
6) For several of the above reasons, phones are used to coordinate meeting up after school/work, are used on trains where voice is banned, and use to access content to pass the time commuting. They combine elements of recreation and communication tools.
In terms of business models, i-mode is more business model than technology, and the i-mode approach works well where it has been introduced outside Japan. Compare that with Vodafone's idiot Live! service, which is painful in comparison.
Well, not enough infoi there to sway anybody, but I'm in the industry and cellphones can be personal computing devices, but only in some or the majority of cultures. I don't think the US is one of those cultures right now: phones are utility devices, rather than fashion statements and recreational devices. Nothing wrong with that. But I think in Japan, gadgets are likely to be in the pocket, whereas in the US they're more likely to be on the desk.
Re:Why phones work in Japan (Score:2)
For me, this is the number-one reason I use my cel phone. When I lived in Canada, I could not understand why people would just do text messaging... "Why not just pick up the phone?" Once I came here, I understood perfectly. Sending chatty text messages back and forth with your friends is an easy way to fill up a 45-minute train ride. Not only that, but with the subways moving in and out of the service area, text messaging is pe
docking port? (Score:2)
Re:docking port? (Score:2)
"The deeper problems with using an existing or standard PC include the following:"
"A standard PC offers multiple ways to do any given task, thus creating confusion (e.g., email can be sent from Outlook Express, Outlook, clicking right on a document, using a Web-based mail system such as Gmail or Hotmail)"
It's called options, I choose to use Thunderbird while others may pick Outlook
"A standard PC needs to be told who are the users and what are their privileg
The Blackberry has come quite far along (Score:3, Informative)
I think most people will still need a PC. I mean, you're not ever going to have a good experience running Photoshop on your phone. I don't think all the attachments on a phone make it a good experience either. I'm not hauling all that junk around all the time just in case if I need to use it. There's no reason why there can't be more client-server or cached apps to access larger systems (CRM's, whatever) that would be perfectly suited on a small screen device.
I think one issue the US mobile phone companies have to straighten out before any advanced devices can be released is the 3G and other high-bandwidth systems. You can't realistically expect to have your data hosted at a service provider or have reasonable web browsing without it. And you can't expect people to pay $200 a month either.
Definately these new products need to be Linux-based or at least comaptible. I think the major companies are still a bit scared/confused about the Linux thing, but a lot of great apps come from open-source type projects and even more so in the Linux community. If this doesn't happen, we'd just be at the mercy of the vendor and we won't get very far waiting for them to make us apps.
Will always be watching...
-m
Or (Score:2, Insightful)
Whoever said that I ask too much?
A couple of likely contenders.. (Score:4, Informative)
Prefer Linux? Well, maybe check out the Nokia 770 [shopforphones.co.uk] internet tablet. Despite the "Nokia" label, it's not a phone, but a compact internet tablet that you can use with a compatible Bluetooth phone or a WiFi connection. The screen is 800 pixels wide, which is pretty good for web browsing. I'm pretty sure that they'll be a keyboard available for it in 2006 when it gets its first software update. The Nokia 770 should be hitting the streets very soon for a rumoured $300 or so.
Of these two competing products, the Nokia is perhaps the more interesting as it has a modular approach and it means that you don't have to lug a half-pound handset around just to make calls. Just how much access to get to the Linux innards is unknown, but really it's just an appliance rather than a full blown computer. You can betcha that I'm going to get one though!
Maybe he has a point (Score:4, Insightful)
Impress or some such (with embedded full speed video and complex
transition effects - note that my videos are circa 1 Gb in size
each so you figure 10 Gb of fast storage) then I guess I'd
consider giving up my laptop.
Actually no, I also edit my presentations before conferences so
I'd need things like Adobe Illustrator and Matlab to run. So
I guess I'd need a full desktop OS with 50 to 100 Gb HDD and
a processor equivalent of 2.8 GhZ P4. Oh, it also better be able
to read CD and DVD (and soon Blu-Ray as my lab is buying that as
soon as it comes out).
So no, the more I think about it, the less I like the idea of
everything on a cell phone. In fact most people need to be able
to read CDs or DVDs so this idea seems rather inadequate.
This would be great if... (Score:2, Interesting)
Its amazing really... (Score:3, Insightful)
IM-not-so-HO, until we get past fanatacism over small things, we'll never get to the larger more important issues. Computer science is really only beginning... Windows is not the end of development for computers. Think about the voice operated computer systems on Star Trek or any other scifi show. We have a long way to go. The home computer will not be replace by a mobile device... DUH
Needs free internet (Score:2)
It's about data mobility (Score:3, Insightful)
Versions of his idea have been floating around for some years now. I don't mean to be sour grapes, but not much novelty here, IMHO.
I think the real need is one of mobility. We're tied to our laptops/desktops because they have OUR applications, OUR environment, configured OUR way, with OUR data. If we could create an appliance that allowed us to carry all of that with us, or network protcols that gave us fast, 24/7 access to those reosurces, then we are not tied to a specific device or place. Right now we are tied to a specific computer for some tasks (e.g. work that requires our personal environment to be productive), or to a specific device (e.g. for listening to music). This is starting to change in exciting ways, but we're certainly not there yet.
I'm not saying we access all that data with the same device or interface, only that it's mobile. We still might normally access that data through different devices, but we would have more flexibility. So a cell phone is a reasonable candidate for this "hub"-like function, in the so many people carry it with them all the time. A wristwatch might be an even better candidate, although the interface to such a tiny object would be an obstacle.
In short, I see the issues of data mobility and interface as distinct concerns.
great idea (Score:2)
I Still Want a Wireless Monitor (Score:2)
same thing I told Sharp over 3 years ago-Zaurus (Score:3, Interesting)
It goes with the fact that it makes more sense for iPod users to have the ability to play their music, automatically, to audio devices( car, home stereo, etc ) when in proximity to those devices, instead of having totally different input sources everywhere you go. That's starting to happen in the auto industry with builtin iPod interfaces but a more generic interface is needed. A lowend capability is available with that FM addon and so playback happens in both locations( home and auto ) with just a tuning change. This concept of a handheld also being your computer follows in that concept. The concept of taking YOUR data/information and access personality( applications ) with you. I like it.
This seems to be is a step toward the STNG( Star Trek: Next Gen ) communicators, only instead of centralized computational capabilies, the computer comes with the wearer. Just a beefed up pendant. Actually, the STNG system could be somewhat emulated with a Bluetooth pendant, with the voice profile, combined with a central voice command system and an office full of SunRays. The SunRay system would have to be using Bluetooth instead of the physical ID system they deploy with now.
I like the idea and hope it gains backing, though I see the Microsoft / PC sector fighting this like they did the network computer concept. It means fewer Windows PCs being sold, the PC no longer is the holder of YOUR data/information. Also, the idea of SIMPLIFIED computer features instead of more more more is not the one Microsoft way. But, the phone companies are quite large and would love to be THE network, and this would provide another revenue stream in sales of more devices and add-ons for them. This will be fun to watch.
LoB
This article is about how to sell computers (Score:2)
The essential observation is that there is a large, wealthy population (including roughly no one on
Old stuff (Score:2)
All your eggs.... (Score:2)
Locking out the amateur programmers, network costs (Score:4, Insightful)
F'rinstance: My Verizon-servivced LG VX4400 has a "Brew"-based OS, which is a Java-like system owned by Qualcomm. Qualcomm gives away a compiler, but alas, you can't give away your software without getting it certified by the carriers, which takes some pretty hefty fees. Because of this, I can't even get a Solitaire program on my phone without paying $2 and up a month. No other software is available for upload, even with tools that can transfer data to and from the device, such as BitPim. I don't know if there are any locks on Verizon's Treo's, I would hope it's still basically a Palm device like any other.
Shareware has made these PC and handheld platforms what they are today. Free and low-cost software for the Palm and Pocket PC make these devices indispensible. Meanwhile, the phone companies have no interest in supporting your use of uncertified software: it costs them time and money to deal with issues they cause, and the more open the system, the bigger vulnerability to malware of all sorts.
I'm also concerned about cost and performance of networking: high-speed wireless data is starting to trickle in, but at outrageous prices ($80/month for Verizon's service for the Treo). And that's for each handset/computing platform. I've got 6 computers in my house (one for each of the four of us, a company-owned laptop and a media server). There's no way I'd shell out those kind of fees for even the four computers for the four of us.
More open platforms, such as WinCE-, Palm-, and Linux-based smartphones make this a possibility, but there's got to be some kind of reasonable family data plan: If I pay someone such as SBC (my local phone carrier) for DSL and cell service, is it reasonable that I can get DSL-based wireless service in my house, and WiMax or similar outside, all at one price?
Japanese Cellphone and the evolution of language (Score:2, Insightful)
Imagine a Beowolf Cluster! (Score:2)
The perfect device would be something like the Psion Revo or Nokia Communic
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Images... (Score:2, Insightful)
Unfortunately there is more in the article that does make no sense. First of all, he misunderstands the reason why we have PCs. PCs are not sold because they are beautiful, consistent, minimalistic or secure, but because they run the programs that people want to run. I have installed PCs for many clueless users, but they all had some special application they wanted installed. It could be the music program they saw at thei